At this Symposium, we have heard about forms of law practice that raise large questions about the lawyer\u27s role. My sole theme in the present essay is that we often ask the wrong large questions. Too often, the questions about multidisciplinary practice ( MDP ), mediation and arbitration, and in-house lawyering are whether they are good for lawyers and good for clients. These are questions, I will suggest, that the market itself will decide. The right question is not whether new roles with no rules are good for lawyers and clients, but rather whether they are good for the rest of us- us being the citizenry who count on lawyers to be guardians of the law, and who market forces will not necessarily protect. All three of the new roles rais...
Authored with Alan Paterson.The article analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of delivering legal se...
Students studying business planning in an American law school should be told up front that a twenty-...
Lawyering has changed dramatically in the past century, but scholarly and regulatory models have fai...
At this Symposium, we have heard about forms of law practice that raise large questions about the la...
At this Symposium, we have heard about forms of law practice that raise large questions about the la...
If the legal profession embraces multidisciplinary practice (MDP) and allows fee-sharing with nonlaw...
In this Article, I explore the roles of lawyers in alternative dispute resolution ( ADR ), including...
Multidisciplinary practice (MDP) has been aptly described as the, most important issue facing the l...
This Article examines the debate over multidisciplinary practice in the wake of the collapse of Enro...
This working paper assembles empirical data from England, Australia and the United States indicating...
Apparently naive, but in fact not, is the question: What do lawyers do? Many scholars assume the cen...
Mediation is a big business today that is practiced by lawyers and non-lawyers, and is closely relat...
In this Article, Professor Munneke continues the debate over ethical rules governing lawyers\u27 pro...
This Essay looks at whether large law firm business lawyers can do good in today’s society. The auth...
This Essay looks at whether large law firm business lawyers can do good in today’s society. The auth...
Authored with Alan Paterson.The article analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of delivering legal se...
Students studying business planning in an American law school should be told up front that a twenty-...
Lawyering has changed dramatically in the past century, but scholarly and regulatory models have fai...
At this Symposium, we have heard about forms of law practice that raise large questions about the la...
At this Symposium, we have heard about forms of law practice that raise large questions about the la...
If the legal profession embraces multidisciplinary practice (MDP) and allows fee-sharing with nonlaw...
In this Article, I explore the roles of lawyers in alternative dispute resolution ( ADR ), including...
Multidisciplinary practice (MDP) has been aptly described as the, most important issue facing the l...
This Article examines the debate over multidisciplinary practice in the wake of the collapse of Enro...
This working paper assembles empirical data from England, Australia and the United States indicating...
Apparently naive, but in fact not, is the question: What do lawyers do? Many scholars assume the cen...
Mediation is a big business today that is practiced by lawyers and non-lawyers, and is closely relat...
In this Article, Professor Munneke continues the debate over ethical rules governing lawyers\u27 pro...
This Essay looks at whether large law firm business lawyers can do good in today’s society. The auth...
This Essay looks at whether large law firm business lawyers can do good in today’s society. The auth...
Authored with Alan Paterson.The article analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of delivering legal se...
Students studying business planning in an American law school should be told up front that a twenty-...
Lawyering has changed dramatically in the past century, but scholarly and regulatory models have fai...